scholarly journals Creative Transformation of Etiquette——A Case Study of Honorers in Etiquette Teaching

2020 ◽  
Vol 218 ◽  
pp. 02012
Author(s):  
Qiong Feng

Under the tide of reviving traditional culture, Chinese “ritual” culture education, which is the core of traditional culture, is in full swing. The state proposes that traditional culture needs creative transformation. However, how to transform the traditional ritual culture and the contents are not pointed out in detail. In contemporary etiquette teaching, both traditional etiquette and modern etiquette, enjoy many priority rights. From five aspects, this paper analyzes that the “venerable person” needs to be reconstructed urgently, and draws the conclusion that under the background of globalization and the Internet age, both sides of interpersonal communication should stand on an equal footing and regard life as the object of respect.

First Monday ◽  
2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nico Meissner

In 1965, Galtung and Ruge published an influential list of news values. Fifty years later, my article takes this list to demonstrate how mass media principles still apply when building audiences for an independent film in the Internet age. The article builds on the constructivist approach that news values can be actively formulated and stressed. It uses the case study of independent film project 15Malaysia, illustrating how this project, though unknowingly, actively created news value to convince opinion leaders of its worth and, ultimately, build an audience of over two million viewers.


2021 ◽  
Vol 275 ◽  
pp. 01051
Author(s):  
Fei Deng

Tea originated in China and flourished in China. Tea has a long history for China. Tea has given birth to rich history and culture in the long river of history. Tea culture has become an important part of our excellent traditional culture, which has given birth to countless traditional cultural industries. Although with the development of the times, Chinese traditional cultural industry is facing many challenges. Fortunately, the arrival of the information age has brought new opportunities for the traditional cultural industry. This paper analyzes the new ideas brought by the era of “Internet” for the development of tea culture tourism economy, and discusses how to better use information technology to help the development of traditional cultural industry.


Author(s):  
Serafín Ángel Torres Velandia

En la sociedad de principios del siglo XXI es indispensable reflexionar sobre  la función que cumple el  sistema educativo, en su nivel de posgrado, desde la perspectiva pedagógica de las prácticas académicas de profesores y de estudiantes, mediadas por las Tecnologías de la Información y de la Comunicación (TIC). La investigación, como parte de una indagación interinstitucional más amplia, tuvo como objetivo aportar elementos para el diseño y desarrollo de un modelo educativo del posgrado mexicano, apropiado a una economía basada en el conocimiento y en la innovación, que tienda a un crecimiento  inteligente, sostenible e integrador, con fuerte soporte en las redes telemáticas, en particular Internet, a nivel nacional e internacional. Uno de los logros del estudio fue ubicar la complejidad de los modelos innovadores del posgrado dentro de tres dimensiones interrelacionadas: la docencia, la tutoría de la investigación y tesis así como la gestión académica vinculada con factores individuales, organizacionales e institucionales.


Author(s):  
Serafín Ángel Torres Velandia

En la era de internet la economía basada en el conocimiento está sujeta a constantes cambios, por lo que la adquisición de nuevas habilidades y la innovación tecnológica son vitales para toda sociedad moderna. Este trabajo tiene como propósito señalar que con base en las políticas educativas, en México, los posgrados de calidad, mediados por tecnologías digitales, constituyen una herramienta académica privilegiada para el aprendizaje, la investigación y la innovación tecnológica. Desde una perspectiva metodológica de estudio de caso se analizó una nuestra de 22 doctorados consolidados del Programa Nacional de Posgrados de Calidad (PNPC) del CONACYT. Se obtuvo, entre otros resultados relevantes, que en la mayoría de las Instituciones de Educación Superior (IES), responsables de agenciar dichos programas, las condiciones de infraestructura y equipamiento tecnológico adolecen de serias limitaciones o carencias que van en demérito de brindar a los profesores y  estudiantes de posgrados de calidad mejores espacios para un alto rendimiento académico. Lo anterior que constituye un factor negativo en los procesos de formación de profesionales e investigadores con niveles superiores de competencia que les permita ser competitivos a  nivel nacional e internacional.


2006 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 16-27
Author(s):  
Niklas Johansson ◽  
Ulrika Mollstedt

Amit and Zott [2] recognized the importance of understanding value sources in electronic business (ebusiness). However, the concept of e-business is rather broad and therefore this paper suggests a more narrow focus on the value of complementary services. The reason for this approach is an ever-increasing importance for firms to provide complimentary services supporting products. Amit and Zott’s [2] model of the sources of value creation in e-business includes four dimensions of value creation; efficiency, lock-in, complementarities and novelty. In contrast to Amit and Zott [2], we suggest that the four dimensions of the model should not only be used as value creation sources, but moreover as value evaluation dimensions. The findings of this case study, where Metso Paper’s Internet-based service (a complementary service) and some of their customers’ perceptions of the service have been studied, show that the customers have used the services infrequently. This study also shows that in this specific business-to-business context, the characteristics of the product, which the Internet-based service supports, are vital. Therefore, we suggest a modification of Amit and Zott’s [2] business model when used as a model for value evaluation of complementary services, to replace complementarities with nature of the core product.


1997 ◽  
Vol 26 (527) ◽  
Author(s):  
Torben Amtoft ◽  
Hanne Riis Nielson ◽  
Flemming Nielson

The communication patterns of concurrent programs can be expressed succinctly using behaviours; these can be viewed as a kind of causal constraints or as a kind of process algebra terms. We present a system which infers behaviours from a useful fragment of Concurrent ML programs; it is based on previously developed theoretical results and forms the core of a system available on the Internet. By means of a case study, used as a benchmark in the literature, we shall see that the system facilitates the validation of certain safety conditions for reactive systems.


MEDIASI ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-72
Author(s):  
Fredy Yakob

This article discussed the development of technology information which has incorporated the most things in life, Internet technology is one of them. The Internet is recognized not only as channel for one-to-one communication, but also as one-to-many communication. Other than that, because of Internet technology, one can broadcast anything for everyone to watch. Facebook is one of the platform which become most popular social media who can broadcast videos by using feature “Facebook Gaming” that will allow anyone to broadcast themselves while playing games. According to data showed in July 2019, Indonesia was the second largest country in watching live broadcast gamers online. Using qualitative approach and descriptive method, this article described about communication context carried out by these live gamers to their audience. Result showed live gamers not only doing mass communication, but also doing interpersonal communication context in which gave space between communicator and communicant that they are discussed things more than just about the games.


Author(s):  
Helen Richardson ◽  
Darrell Bennetts

These days, no information technology (IT) manager or worker will have escaped the expectation from a client that a job needed to be completed “yesterday.” The field of information systems (IS) research is only beginning to develop models for understanding the emerging issue of workload pressures upon IT workers, and their consequent need to maintain a balance between work and home. IT organisations need to consider how they manage their IT workers, departing from the traditional efficiency approach to staff management, and moving towards one better suited to the globalised environment within which businesses now operate. In its two parts, this chapter will consider the challenges of work-life balance that IT workers increasingly face. These days, IT workers are more vulnerable than other work employment groups to the pressure of contemporary workload expectations and deadlines. Research in the fields of sociology and psychology can help fill in detail on this emerging issue, otherwise absent from contemporary IS research. Sociology and Psychology can help IT practitioners better understand the increasing human cost of the currently increasing commercial pressures. In its first part, this chapter utilises some straightforward sociological concepts to background how “top down” or strategic management of IT workers could be improved within the IT sector. Sociologists have long had a strong interest in social change, in the ways in which both work and non-work (“leisure”) activities are changing within an increasingly globalised world. Many IT workers are now suffering both physical and mental symptoms due to commonplace business management approaches, which ultimately forgo long-term business profitability for short-term bottom lines. The second part of this chapter utilises the understanding of emotional intelligence within psychology and applies it as a bottom up strategy to illustrate how IT workers can cope with work-life imbalance. Here, a case study illustrates how the emotional qualities of resilience and adaptability that some IT workers possess can enable them to overcome work-life imbalances within the pressured context of globalised IT production. Leading on from the case study, the chapter will provide guidance on how IT workers might foster these qualities using HR techniques from the recently developed field of emotional intelligence. By utilising what have so far been interrelated, yet also independent, discussions within sociology and psychology on the effects of the Internet Age upon IT workers, this chapter aims to provide a balanced approach to the intellectual and emotional management of IT workers.


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